Just as Homer Simpson once yelled "be funnier!" at his TV set, shoppers looked at the holiday season's Target + Neiman Marcus collection and wished it were cooler — and cheaper.

Target Corp. had high hopes for the high-profile collection to ignite early December receipts, but sales fizzled instead. That's one reason the Minneapolis-based retailer reported flat sales for December.

Target forgot "expect more, pay less" with the collection, said Amy Koo, an analyst with Kantar Retail consulting near Boston. Many items appeared to be too high-priced, and shoppers who were focused on getting a good deal weren't seeing the value, she said.

"Folks were looking for a gift to share — a scarf, a shirt or a dress — but they were too expensive," she said. "Target needs to re-evaluate the price point and the quality of the product."

Koo calls the collection a "miss" for Target, but the retailer is not giving up on collaborations with designers, Target spokesman Joshua Thomas said. It has a number of programs planned for 2013.

But working with another retailer won't necessarily be in the mix. "We continue to redesign the formula with every collaboration," Thomas said. "Not everything works."

Target hoped that its collaboration with Neiman Marcus and 24 designers would duplicate the selling frenzy generated by its Missoni collection in 2011, when eager shoppers crashed the retailer's website.

Initial indications were promising when the collection debuted on Dec. 1. Online traffic for the collection on the first day was on par with Black Friday numbers.

As the days and weeks went on, however, curious customers shopped the collection, but few were buying it. The entire line was discounted 50 percent on Dec. 20 and 70 percent on Jan. 1, prompting analysts and shoppers to wonder what happened.

Ava Beilke of St. Louis Park, Minn., said the line initially interested her, but she was put off by an assortment that seemed too frivolous (a flask) or too expensive ($50 for a picture frame) at a time when people were spending conservatively.

One change that was made for the Neiman Marcus collection may have been part of the problem. After the Missoni frenzy, where early bird shoppers filled their carts to make a profit re-selling on eBay, shoppers were limited to five per item in the Target + Neiman collection. Inventory was also doubled.

Beilke felt that excess inventory was another reason the collection lost its charm. "I saw nearly 80 of the same party dress on display," she said. "Designer clothing is supposed to be unique, not mass-produced. I don't want to see myself several times over if I wear that dress to a special occasion," she said.

While many shoppers gave the collection a big "meh" at regular price, interest grew after the line was discounted. Brent Meyers, director of the DesignWorks program at Minneapolis College of Art and Design, thinks customers buying the items at 50 or 70 percent off were getting great deals. "Maybe the average Target customer doesn't know or doesn't care about quality, but most of the pieces were a deal even at regular price," he said.

The beading on the girls' $100 dress by Marchesa, the worsted wool men's blazer by Thom Browne for $150 and the Altuzarra tray for $80 had exceptional detail, Meyers said, but Target never explained the quality like Neiman Marcus does.

As for Neiman Marcus' assessment of the partnership, the luxury retailer isn't commenting on the collection until its second-quarter earnings are released in late February, said Ginger Reeder, vice-president of corporate communications.

But Pam Danziger of Unity Marketing in Pennsylvania thinks Neiman's customers were more accepting of the program than Target's. "It featured designer brands that were recognized and familiar to the Neiman Marcus customer at prices that were lower than typical NM products," she said.